-Caveat Lector-

Families of alleged Boston Strangler and victim unite

By MARK PRATT
The Associated Press
12/29/00 1:43 AM


BOSTON (AP) -- Richard DeSalvo never believed his brother, Albert, was the
Boston Strangler. Casey Sherman never believed his aunt, Mary Sullivan, was
killed by Albert DeSalvo, even though he confessed.

Now the families of DeSalvo and Sullivan have come together in an odd
alliance based on one shared belief: DeSalvo did not kill Sullivan.

If the families are right, they say it could cast doubt on the entire Boston
Strangler case, in which 11 Boston-area women were sexually assaulted and
murdered between 1962 and 1964.

It was DeSalvo's own taped confession that convinced the families he was not
the killer.

"Police say he had to be the killer because he knew things only the killer
would know, but when we listened to the confession tape, it's completely
wrong," said Sherman, whose mother's sister was killed in 1964 at age 19.
"He confessed to events that simply never happened."

DeSalvo, a blue-collar worker with a wife and children, confessed to the 11
Boston Strangler murders, as well as two others. But there was never any
physical evidence putting him at the crime scenes. He did not match witness
descriptions of possible suspects. He was never on investigators' lists of
more than 300 suspects. And he was never tried in any of the killings.

DeSalvo was sent to prison for life for another string of rapes and sexual
assaults and was stabbed to death in the maximum-security state prison at
Walpole in 1973 -- but not before he recanted his confession.

In October, the two families had Sullivan's remains exhumed for DNA testing,
a technology that was not available nearly 37 years ago. They hope the
results, expected in February, will put further pressure on prosecutors to
release to them old evidence they hope will clear DeSalvo.

For Sherman and his family, the motivation is to find his aunt's real
killer. "The real killer of these women is still on the streets," he said.

For the DeSalvos, the motivation is to clear the family name. Richard
DeSalvo said that members of the family have been berated and assaulted
because of the Boston Strangler case and that it has led to rifts in the
family.

All 11 women believed to be the Strangler victims were strangled with
articles of their own clothing, and one was also stabbed repeatedly.

Sherman said that DeSalvo could have gotten details about Sullivan's slaying
of Sullivan from the newspapers.

In his confession, DeSalvo said he strangled her with his hands. In reality,
she was strangled with her own clothing. DeSalvo also claimed to have raped
her; actually, she was sexually assaulted with a broomstick.

A forensic scientist who took part in an autopsy arranged by the families
said experts were unable to find the effects of a blow DeSalvo claimed to
have inflicted on Sullivan.

Also, the families said DeSalvo claimed to have left a knife and a sweater
at the murder scene. They said neither was found.

Tests are being conducted on 68 samples of hair, semen and tissue taken from
Sullivan's exhumed body. Richard DeSalvo said his brother's body would also
be exhumed if it would help.

Sherman said a prime suspect in his aunt's death is a former boyfriend of
one of her roommates. There was no evidence of forced entry into the
apartment, he said.

Albert DeSalvo confessed to the Boston Strangler killings because he knew he
was going to prison for life anyway and wanted to cash in on book and movie
deals so he could take care of his family, his brother said.

Also, according to the families, DeSalvo's lawyer, F. Lee Bailey, convinced
him that if he confessed, he would go to a mental institution rather than
prison.

Bailey, who did not respond to messages left at his office in Boston and
West Palm Beach, Fla., has said he still believes DeSalvo was the Boston
Strangler.

The attorney general's office is taking a new look at the Sullivan slaying
and has denied the families access to evidence because the case is still
considered unsolved. A judge earlier this month ordered the two sides to try
to work something out.

Jerry Leone, chief of the Massachusetts attorney general's criminal bureau,
said that if evidence points to someone other than DeSalvo as Sullivan's
killer, it doesn't necessarily cast doubt on all the other Boston Strangler
murders and doesn't mean the other cases will be reinvestigated.

"We are looking into the Sullivan case because it's the only case that has
any evidence that can be used in a viable prosecution right now," Leone
said.

But Richard DeSalvo said: "If it's proven he didn't kill Mary Sullivan, it
raises a question about all the others."


Copyright 2000 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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